CIA Senior Intelligence Service officer with distinguished, wide-ranging career in intelligence, spanning more than 41 years and ranging from combat tactical intelligence in Vietnam to Intelligence Community (IC) management. Particular strengths in technical intelligence, proliferation-related intelligence and weapons of mass destruction (WMD) issues, intelligence collection management, and foreign partner relations, gained through serving in multiple IC agencies, both domestically and abroad. Most recently served as the Office of the Director of National Intelligence (ODNI) National Counterproliferation Center’s (NCPC) Deputy Director for WMD Security Issues and, prior to that, as the Department of Energy’s (DOE) Deputy Director for Intelligence, overseeing intelligence-related work throughout the DOE National Lab complex. Proven record as leader, organizational innovator, and creative problem-solver.

Career military intelligence officer with a consistent record of success while assigned to conventional and special operations units, specializing in Intelligence, Counterintelligence, plans and operations.Experience in multi-discipline intelligence, research and analytical activities focused on technology, cultures, and their implications to organizational structures and operational processes. Managed personnel across the intelligence collection spectrum (HUMINT, IMINT, MASINT, and SIGINT).Goals: Combining values-based leadership with organizational goals meeting intelligence requirements emphasizing timely, accurate and effective responses to the DoD consumer.

Currently retired and doing a variety of volunteer work:Local Hospice House volunteerLocal SPCA City of Concord, N.H. Public Safety BoardMember of the N.H. Supreme Court Attorney Disciplinary BoardFreelance writer

Mission - Preempt threats and further US national security objectives by collecting intelligence that matters, producing objective all-source analysis, conducting effective covert action as directed by the President, and safeguarding the secrets that help keep our Nation safe. The sum of abiding principles, core values, and highest aspirations, needed for the job is called ethos. This ethos holds one on course as one exercises the extraordinary influence and authority with which one has been entrusted in to protect the Nation and advance its interests. CIA’s ethos has many dimensions, including: Service. We put Nation first, Agency before unit, and mission before self. We take pride in being agile, responsive, and consequential. Integrity. We uphold the highest standards of lawful conduct. We are truthful and forthright, and we provide information and analysis without institutional or political bias. We maintain the Nation’s trust through accountability and oversight. Excellence. We bring the best of who we are to everything we do. We are self aware, reflecting on our performance and learning from it. We strive to give our officers the tools, experiences, and leadership they need to excel. Courage. We accomplish difficult, high-stakes, often dangerous tasks. In executing mission, we carefully manage risk but we do not shy away from it. We value sacrifice and honor our fallen. Teamwork. We stand by and behind one another. Collaboration, both internal and external, underpins our best outcomes. Diversity and inclusion are mission imperatives. Stewardship. We preserve our ability to obtain secrets by protecting sources and methods from the moment we enter on duty until our last breath.

Executive Intelligence Analyst

Start Date: 2015-02-01End Date: 2015-04-27

Developing and applying analytic methods to add rigor and precision to intelligence analysis and collection. Providing statistical, operational research, as well as econometric, mathematical and geospatial modeling. Providing surveying support to Agency analysis, and communicating findings via a broad range of very well written intelligence products as well as precisely effective verbal presentations. Encouraging maintenance and a broadening of professional ties through rigorous academic study, contacts, and attendance at professional meetings. One can pursue additional studies in fields relevant to areas of responsibility. Foreign and domestic opportunity for travel, language training, analytic and management training, assignments sending one to other offices in the Agency and throughout the US Government.

Senior Operations Analyst

Start Date: 2001-09-01

Company employees bring their best to everything that they do at CIA. A Senior Operations Analyst is agile, responsive, and consequential, upholding the highest standards of lawful conduct, providing information and analysis without institutional or political bias, maintaining the Nation’s trust through accountability and oversight. One reflects on performance and learns from it, gives clandestine officers and cooperative assets the tools, experiences, and leadership they need to excel. Analyzing operations centered on preempting threats and furthering US national security objectives and collecting intelligence that matters, as well as producing objective all-source analysis, conducting effective covert action as directed by the President, closely safeguarding the secrets that help keep America safe, while placing Nation first, Agency before unit, and mission before self. The sum of abiding principles, core values, and highest aspirations, needed for the job is ethos. This ethos keeps one on course as CIA exercises the extraordinary influence and authority entrusted in its employees to protect the Nation, while advancing its interests. We accomplish difficult, high-stakes, often dangerous tasks. Collect human intelligence of concern to the U.S. President, policymakers, and military by recruiting and handling clandestine human sources in a secure manner. Clandestinely spot, assess, develop, recruit and handle human sources with access to vital intelligence, thus playing a critical role in developing and implementing U.S. foreign and national security policy and protecting western interests. Acquiring high-value intelligence from human sources while dealing with fast-moving, ambiguous, and unstructured situations by combining both "people and street smarts" with subject matter expertise and knowledge of foreign languages, world travel, and cultures.